Parker v. United States
This text of 125 F. Supp. 731 (Parker v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The plaintiff, Bonnie Howe Parker, divorced wife of Richard Dean Howe, now deceased, brings this action to gain judicial recognition that she, as one of named beneficiaries, is entitled to $5,000 of the proceeds of a $10,000 National Service Life Insurance policy issued to the de[732]*732cedent and in effect at the time the insured died in a civilian airplane crash on May 23, 1949.1
The life insurance policy in question was taken out by the decedent on May 1, 1942, just after induction into the United States Navy. At the time the policy was issued, decedent's mother, Mrs. Anna Katherine Howe, defendant in this action, was designated sole beneficiary. On November 1, 1944, the insured signed a regularly recognized “Change of Beneficiary” form designating that his mother, defendant herein, and his wife, the plaintiff herein, should share alike as beneficiaries, $5,000 to go to each of them.2 Prior to the death of the insured the plaintiff divorced him and remarried.
After the death of the insured on May 23, 1949, and based upon a notation contained in the decedent’s “Confidential Data Sheet” which had been signed April 19, 1949, wherein insured’s mother, Anna Howe, was mentioned to be the beneficiary under the policy,3 the Veterans’ Administration ruled that the mother was the sole beneficiary and that the insured’s former wife had no rights under the policy.4
At the conclusion of the evidence in the trial before the Court, the Court ruled from the bench that the evidence indicated that the insured desired to have his mother, the defendant in this action, receive the entire $10,000, to the exclusion of his former wife, the plaintiff. However, the Court took under advisement the single issue of whether an affirmative act effectuating a change of beneficiary from the original change designating that the plaintiff and defendant share alike had taken place.
The Court has carefully studied the briefs of counsel and all cases cited therein and has concluded that the case of Bradley v. United States, the majority opinion written by Judge Murrah, is controlling over the case at bar.5 The for[733]*733mula expressed by Judge Murrah as applied to the facts in the instant case leaves no doubt in this Court’s mind but what the insured, as in the Bradley case, supra, intended that the beneficiary be changed but took absolutely no affirmative action to consummate such change. The only objective act which has been urged as bringing about a change in the designated beneficiaries is a notation in the insured’s Confidential Data Sheet, signed á little over a month prior to the death of the insured, wherein the insured’s mother, the defendant herein, was listed as the beneficiary of his National Service Life Policy.
As observed in the majority opinion in the Bradley case where an identical argument was advanced: 6
“There is nothing in the confidential report or the evidence in this case from which it can be legitimately inferred that it was intended for the use and information of the Veterans’ Administration, or that its purpose was to effect a change of beneficiary under the life insurance policy. * * * At most it indicates a belief or understanding that his wife was the then present beneficiary. When given its most liberal construction in the light of all the facts and circumstances, we are convinced that it cannot be treated as an effectuation of the insured’s intention to change his beneficiary.” (Emphasis supplied.)
Likewise, in the instant case, the insured took no affirmative steps to change the named beneficiaries after the original change was made in November of 1944 which named his wife and his mother.
The defendant implies that several authorities differ with the conclusion reached by the majority Court in the Bradley case.7 Although these cited cases can be distinguished from the Bradley case, as well as the case at bar,8 in any event this Court is bound by the majority opinion in the Bradley case decided in this circuit. In addition, this Court is satisfied that the principles recognized in the Bradley case constitute the only pattern consistently usable to determine the rights of parties under National Life Insurance policies, even though, as in the instant case, at times the ultimate result may be contrary to what the Court earnestly conceives to have been the intent of the insured. Although decisions have long recognized that an intention to change beneficiary must be accompanied by some affirmative act designed to so change;9 and, even [734]*734though Courts should be most liberal in taking legal cognizance of affirmative acts reasonably interpretable as done in furtherance of the expressed wishes of the insured,10 the Courts must not promiscuously seize upon an act which in all logic cannot be deemed as done to effectuate a change and thus by loose judicial interpretation in effect destroy the affirmative act requirement.11
The plaintiff is entitled to judgment. Counsel should submit a journal entry which conforms with this opinion within twenty days.
Dated this 4th day of October, 1954.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
125 F. Supp. 731, 1954 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2755, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parker-v-united-states-cod-1954.